|
Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2016 18:31:06 GMT -5
Day 8 Blew me away as a little girl and got me reading something called...Action Comics...in a world that was previously 99% Marvel dominated. Christopher Reeve remains my definitive Superman to this day.
|
|
|
Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 20, 2016 18:53:41 GMT -5
Chris Reeve made me like Superman!
|
|
|
Post by Pól Rua on Dec 20, 2016 19:29:54 GMT -5
5. Speed Racer (2008)Speed Racer was probably my first favourite thing, predating even my love affair with The Thunderbirds, Batman and The Super Friends, so when I heard that there was going to be a big-screen adaption, I was less than thrilled. I was certain they'd screw it up, and the weird, candy-coloured trailer didn't serve to disabuse me of that impression. "No," I thought, "It should be like those old 60's racing movies! They're screwing this up!" So I didn't see it at the movies. Later, I had a copy, and thought, "Ah well, I should give it a go... if it's awful, I can just turn it off..." How wrong I had been... This film is an absolute gem. In an age where most film-makers are too concerned with nailing the visuals or getting that 'perfect emotionally cathartic moment' to bother with stuff like establishing characters and motivations, constructing a narrative that progresses and builds naturally from scene to scene to a climax, setting up later plot points early on, world-building... all that stuff that isn't as sexy as that one great shot, but last the solid foundation for everything that comes after so that your grand 'moment' doesn't end up being flat, pointless and hollow, 'Speed Racer' gets everything right. First of all, the film is smart. It had a lot of information to dump on the viewer and it does so deftly without stalling. Secondly, it's ABOUT something. This isn't just about a hero who's good at driving. It's about family and what that means, about the value of intangibles like loyalty, honesty and principle as weighed against power, money and material worth. And thirdly, it delivers all of this with genuineness. So many films these days present fantasy either as a deconstruction or as mocking irony, but 'Speed Racer' (like pretty much all my favourite filmic adaptions) goes for that third, dangerous path - absolute heartfelt sincerity. There are so many perfect moments in this film. The relationships between Pops and his two sons. Speed and Racer X trading quips during the desert race. The gloriously arch interrogation sequence. But if I had to pick one, it would be Roger Allam's amazing speech where he reveals the truth about racing to Speed. In any other hands, this would run the risk of being either dry as dust (it's essentially a discussion of stock price manipulation) or ludicrously over-the-top (Royalton is, in this scene, at his most Mephistophelean), but because of the amazing performances, inspired editing and emotional sincerity, it ends up being a masterpiece. And that's pretty much how I feel about the whole film.
|
|
|
Post by String on Dec 20, 2016 20:15:35 GMT -5
#5 Akira
Others have already sung the praises of this film to which I can only add the following. This is the godfather of anime films, almost required viewing of the genre. Otomo somehow, someway condensed the vast themes of his sci-fi magnum opus into a dynamic, revolutionary film. Akira was one of my first exposures to both anime and manga via Archie Goodwin and Epic Comics imprint. Otomo decided to have his masterpiece colored for the first time ever back in the late 80s and Epic released the results in a 38 issue series. Naturally, some of the backup features of these issues had notes and thoughts by Goodwin on the the upcoming animated film. His excitement over the project got me excited too (along with becoming engrossed with this tragic story of two best friends). Fortunately, I was able to later acquire a VCR tape of the film and Goodwin was rightfully so in being excited and impressed by this effort because it just blew me away. At that point, Had-Never-Seen-Anything-Like-It. Also, I must mention the equally impressive soundtrack of this film. From Kaneda's Theme to the Funeral Requiem for Tetsuo, the music is so vital to enhancing the mood and drama of this work. Even today, whenever I re-read the manga (Epic colored or DH black & white original), I can't help but 'hear' snippets of this soundtrack as I do so.
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Dec 20, 2016 20:56:12 GMT -5
# 5. Iron Man ( 2008)I can't believe I left this off my list, This is the most Important movie of the entire Marvel Universe. Without the success of this film, there is no Thor. There is no Captain America. No Avengers, Guardians of the Galaxy and so on. Robert Downey Jr. makes himself a superstar and the lynchpin of the Marvel Superhero Franchise with his likeable and charismatic portrayal Of Tony Stark/ Iron Man. The Film itself is Shellheads origin tale updated to todays era and it made a second tier Marvel hero into one of the most recognizable characters in the world. Yes , it is very important that this film didn't tank like Green Lantern or else we wouldn't be enjoying the golden age of comic book movies that we are right now.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 20, 2016 21:00:16 GMT -5
This was #12 on my list back in '07. It's been ten years since I've seen it, though, so it got bumped for newer stuff I like better. Cei-U! I summon the only anime I ever truly liked! I didn't really think anime counted.... especially something like Full Metal Alchemist... where only the first 1/3 or so of the series is an adaptation, then the show runners caught the manga and did their own thing. If I was doing anime, 'Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood' would be #1 with a bullet... by far the best series of any sort I've watched. If you guys have only watched the original, do yourself a favor and watch Brotherhood.. it's the 'true' version (100% adapted from the manga) and it's a big improvement on the already great show. Funnily enough, my next pick is also 5. Iron Man . I remember WAY back in the day, there was going to be an Iron Man move with Tom Cruise.. I sure am glad that didn't happen, because RDJ was perfect. Sure, they made him a little overly whiny and unsure of himself in the later movies, but the first one is a darn near perfect adaptation, in my opinion.
|
|
|
Post by coke & comics on Dec 21, 2016 2:56:22 GMT -5
This was #12 on my list back in '07. It's been ten years since I've seen it, though, so it got bumped for newer stuff I like better. Cei-U! I summon the only anime I ever truly liked! I didn't really think anime counted.... especially something like Full Metal Alchemist... where only the first 1/3 or so of the series is an adaptation, then the show runners caught the manga and did their own thing. By that logic, most of the entries aren't adaptations. Iron Man does its own thing as well. The point is the characters or comics originated in comics.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,197
|
Post by Confessor on Dec 21, 2016 11:41:34 GMT -5
#5: Flash Gordon (1980) I have very fond memories of seeing this at my local cinema, aged 8, and being totally wowed by it. At that time I had never read any of the Flash Gorden comic strips, of course, but I had watched some of the old Buster Crabbe movie serials on early morning kid's TV. Anyway, being mostly unfamiliar with the source material didn't matter a jot: this film swept me up in all its fun, over-the-top, cheesy glory. Something that I really like and appreciate about Flash Gordon nowadays, but which went over my head as a kid, is that the set designers, model builders, wardrobe department, and director Mike Hodges deliberately kept the look of those old serials, while updating the design aesthetic slightly for an '80s audience. I mean, this film didn't look like Star Wars, as so many other sci-fi films of the era attempted to, it was clearly indebted to the look of those old Crabbe shorts. I must've watched Flash Gordon dozens of times over the years and it never, ever gets old. It features "career best" performances (in my opinion) from the likes of Max von Sydow as Ming the Merciless, Timothy Dalton as Prince Barin, and, of course, Brian Blessed as Prince Vultan. "Hawkmen...Diiiiiiiiive!!!!" To top it all off, you have that kick-ass soundtrack from Queen and I even own the soundtrack album. Yep, in terms of a pure, comic strip-cum-space opera movies, they don't come any better than this.
|
|
|
Post by Icctrombone on Dec 21, 2016 13:15:55 GMT -5
I wasn't aware that Speed Racer was a comic first.
|
|
|
Post by Cei-U! on Dec 21, 2016 13:19:45 GMT -5
I wasn't aware that Speed Racer was a comic first. Me either! Cei-U! Does NOT know his manga!
|
|
|
Post by hondobrode on Dec 21, 2016 13:44:52 GMT -5
Today's selection is about a character from Over There named Judge Dredd. No, not Sylvester Stallone. The real thang, from Karl Urban, " Scottie" "Dr. McCoy" on the J.J. Abrams' excellent Star Trek reboot franchise. You probably saw the 90's Judge Dredd. Version 2.0 is much better, but still didn't do that well. Or did it ? This Dredd is the real deal. The whole movie felt right. Urban will be the first to tell you that what killed this movie was lack of marketing, and he's right. So sad for such an excellent character. If America's # 1 character is Batman, which may be debateable, there's no doubt in my mind, at least from my view on this side of the pond, the most popular would be Dredd. Great concept of the Mega-Cities and the Cursed Earth and the Judges basically as super cops. Dredd and rookie Judge Anderson, born with psionic powers, go to the 200 story Peachtree Towers slum, run by prostitute-turned-gang boss Ma-Ma. They investigate a report of 3 drug dealers turned rogue caught, skinned alive by Ma-Ma and thrown from the top floor. The Judges break into Ma-Ma's penthouse stronghold and Ma-Ma "tests" the security system by locking down the entire tower, and all the tenants turn on the two. Remember me saying this flopped at the box office ? It did, but when people later heard about it after the fact, it launched at # 1 in DVD sales at release selling 75,000 copies in its first week. As a fan who started reading, and loving, Dredd in 1980 (thanks Bud Plant) just 3 years after it started, I think this is an excellent film and hope against all odds somehow someway someone wises up and gives Dredd his own cable series.
|
|
|
Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 21, 2016 14:35:09 GMT -5
Today's selection is about a character from Over There named Judge Dredd. No, not Sylvester Stallone. The real thang, from Karl Urban, "Scottie" on the J.J. Abrams' excellent Star Trek reboot franchise. Dammit Jim, I'm a doctor, not an engineer!
|
|
|
Post by hondobrode on Dec 21, 2016 15:07:20 GMT -5
Of course he is !
What was I thinking......
Corrected and a big Thank You to Raider.
I'm sure I'd be in the stockade in Mega-City One
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 21, 2016 16:39:18 GMT -5
I didn't really think anime counted.... especially something like Full Metal Alchemist... where only the first 1/3 or so of the series is an adaptation, then the show runners caught the manga and did their own thing. By that logic, most of the entries aren't adaptations. Iron Man does its own thing as well. The point is the characters or comics originated in comics. That's true, but manga is different... just about everything that has any modicum of popularity gets an anime, and vise versa (if the anime is first). I'm not saying it's against the rules, just not what I think of when I think of comic book adaptations .
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2016 17:28:22 GMT -5
Judge Dredd would have been #13 if this list was a baker's dozen.
Was disappointed with both movies...
|
|